Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-17 Thread Matt Beebe
I've never known the weight of any of my bikes, and I've ridden lots of 
bikes throughout my life.I mean, I've known published weights for 
frames I've owned, but have never weighed my bike when built up. 

Obviously everybody has different things they look for in a bicycle, and 
different uses in mind.   For me the most important thing is how the bike 
handles for the riding I like to do-  not pedal-wise handling, or planing 
so to speak, or acceleration-   but gliding, carving, pulling it over 
obstacles, etc.   For example, I care how nimble it is when unloaded, or if 
can I bunnyhop easily (chainstay length and BB height affect this greatly) 
and whether the bike is still relatively stable when loaded (it seems 
chainstay length and BB height affect this too, though TT length and so on 
also come into play more here). That alone is a delicate balance.
For me, most Rivendells achieve that balance-   in addition to their many 
other features-  nicely, as compared to, say, a cross or mountain bike with 
what I consider very short chainstays and super-high BB, or a Thorn Nomad, 
with three-foot chainstays for expedition touring.I don't want a super 
thin-walled TT because I don't race, don't care about going fast compared 
to anyone else (on the road) and furthermore, I WILL dent the TT, if it is 
made of .7/.4/.7 tubing, in the course of locking the bike to a pole with 
other bikes, or something like that. I care about a reasonable degree 
of toughness and service.I try to use quality steel chainrings and 
long-wearing tires for that reason.   I believe without a doubt that 
ultra-thin walled TT tubing and/or lightness is great for racing and road 
performance, keeping up with a pack, etc. but I don't care about those 
types of riding.

Right now I'm riding studded nokian tires because it is winter in New 
England (though winters are tame these days-  resembling more an extension 
of late autumn straight to early spring).   I always notice quite a 
sluggish feeling *on the road* after putting the tires on in late December, 
but honestly I get used to it in about two rides to work and then forget 
about it.   In March, going back to Marathon tires, the bike feels fast 
on the road even though I'm sure some people would say Marathons feel like 
they're filled with sand.Off road, on trails, I notice no difference 
whatsoever, because speed is on a whole different scale in that case, and 
any drag from tread or stout casing is overwhelmed by the unevenness of the 
root-laden, rocky, or muddy ground.


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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-16 Thread Scott Henry
I'm fine talking steel, lugs, carbon, groupsets, touring, fixies, really
just about anything bike related.  Nothing really gets me going like
talking about rider weight.  I am 6' and right around 225 pounds.  Yes, I
will be the first to admit that I need to lose some weight, but I refuse to
call myself fat.  I am a man and I am an American man.  Its my right to eat
and drink beer AND enjoy my sport.

I can ride a Riv weighing closer to 35# with a stout frame and 36 spoke
heavy wheels and have a blast.
I can also ride my carbon race bike with low spoke custom wheels and have a
blast too at half the bike weight.
I even have an old 979 set as a urban fixie, and its super fun too.

Any bike can be fun and bicycles as a whole are overbuilt to the point that
rider weight doesn't really matter.  A powerful track sprinter probably
would flex my Vitus in half, but for normal people with normal power, a
bike will perform just fine.

I will vnture a guess that most of us here have more than one bike
availiable to us.  If I am doing a fast ride, I ride my racing bike.  A
long ride on a weekend, I pick something else.  Every thing has its
specific use.   Anyone remember the movie Tin Cup, where Kevin Costner play
the back nine golf holes with only a 7 iron?  It can be done, but why would
you try?   I can tour on my carbon, but why when I have my touring bike.
I could race on my Atlantis, but why when I have a racing bike on the hook
next to it?


Scott





On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 11:18 PM, charlie cl_v...@hotmail.com wrote:

 I think this whole frame flex business has something to do with rider
 power and weight also. I don't believe a super light tubed frame would last
 long with me riding it and would most likely develop cracks sooner. Were I
 165 pounds again maybe not but the average beginner male cyclist over 40
 who is able to afford a pricey frame probably doesn't weigh that
 either..probably closer to 200 I'd wager. Just wanted to put a dose of
 reality into perhaps why the G-man makes stouter frames that many. Do they
 perform significantly worse than a skinny, thin tubed frame? I don't know
 but I'll bet we'd be splitting some pretty fine hairs.


 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 10:26:55 AM UTC-8, Patrick in VT wrote:

 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 12:18:52 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:


 For a mind-blowing example of the above,  be sure to read the road test
 of the titanium road bikes in the current issue of BQ.  (I'm going to
 leave the big reveal to Jan, if he wants to pick up on the cue...)


 i'm inclined to believe that frames of any material can have optimized
 frame flex characteristics as far as performance is concerned.  all the
 talk regarding stiffness with respect to racing bikes seems a little
 overdone, if not a little misleading, since removing material - be it
 steel, CF or Ti - from the frame to put them at combat weight must also
 reduce stiffness to some degree, esp. when that the bulk of that weight is
 in the main tubes.  i'm not 100% on that, but would agree with Jan that it
 points to a correlation with weight and flex.

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-16 Thread Patrick in VT
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 11:18:01 PM UTC-5, charlie wrote:

 I think this whole frame flex business has something to do with rider 
 power and weight also. 


Yes, that's the idea - planing is realizing optimal frame flex 
characteristics for a given rider.  Kind of like getting fit for a pair of 
xc skis, which are fit by weight in order to optimize flex, and therefore, 
performance.  Anyway, most folks riding performance oriented bikes (for the 
sake of actual performance) are way, way under 200lbs so the conversation 
naturally revolves around lightweight frames - I don't think anybody is 
arguing that a Clydesdale needs to be on a super flexy frame to experience 
planing or maximize their performance on the bike (which, at that weight, 
probably isn't a concern).  

In any event, it's definitely splitting hairs as going fast on a bike is 
primarily determined by power to weight ratio and aerobic capacity - even 
if Jan is right that we can eek some extra wattage by optimizing frame 
flex, that still takes a backseat along with tires and all the other stuff, 
which eflayer wrote, results in a subtle appreciation of the overall 
quality of the ride.  We develop preferences based on those subtleties and 
eventually land on something that works for us if we're paying attention or 
geeky enough to care.  It's certainly related to performance to some 
degree, but I'd argue that it's more of a conversation about preferences 
and feel - stuff that is mostly subjective and fun to babble about.  

Performance is another matter all together, and one that should focus on 
the rider and not the bike, which becomes largely irrelevant (so long as 
we're talking apples to apples) when you start talking about about rider's 
physiology - the stuff that is entirely objective and puts real performance 
into perspective.  It's hard to overstate the difference between the 
engines of a Cat 2 amateur racer or a Jan Heine and the enthusiast who does 
the occasional event whether it's racing, randonneuring, club riding or 
whatever. 









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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-16 Thread Cicloski


On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 9:18:52 AM UTC-8, Steve Palincsar wrote:

 On Tue, 2013-01-15 at 09:08 -0800, Jan Heine wrote: 
  
  That explains why in our experience, performance correlates only very 
  weakly with weight, but very strongly with optimized frame flex 
  characteristics. 

 For a mind-blowing example of the above,  be sure to read the road test 
 of the titanium road bikes in the current issue of BQ.  (I'm going to 
 leave the big reveal to Jan, if he wants to pick up on the cue...) 

  (Of course, weight and optimized frame flex characteristics are 
  correlated on most bikes, hence lightweight bikes often perform better 
  than heavier ones.) 

 But http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0vEgU88IQQ 


 The builder of the bike that was consistently ridden faster in the test, 
 states that the reason being it is stiffer in the bottom bracket area.  I 
 would have expected the other bike to be the faster based upon previous 
 tests that Jan has done for BQ.  The builder goes on to point out that his 
 bike is the less comfortable of the two bikes being compared, also because 
 of this stiffness. The results just seem counter to the concept of 
 planing. I prefer to ride a more flexible frame, but not for the reason 
 of pace.   Maybe Jan would like to expand more on this?  


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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-16 Thread Robert Barr
To the Group - this string is a perfect example of why I always try to read
the RBW Owners Bunch. Thanks to all. Bob (Indiana)


On Wed, Jan 16, 2013 at 1:51 PM, Cicloski lite...@comcast.net wrote:



 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 9:18:52 AM UTC-8, Steve Palincsar wrote:

 On Tue, 2013-01-15 at 09:08 -0800, Jan Heine wrote:
 
  That explains why in our experience, performance correlates only very
  weakly with weight, but very strongly with optimized frame flex
  characteristics.

 For a mind-blowing example of the above,  be sure to read the road test
 of the titanium road bikes in the current issue of BQ.  (I'm going to
 leave the big reveal to Jan, if he wants to pick up on the cue...)

  (Of course, weight and optimized frame flex characteristics are
  correlated on most bikes, hence lightweight bikes often perform better
  than heavier ones.)

 But 
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?**v=i0vEgU88IQQhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0vEgU88IQQ


 The builder of the bike that was consistently ridden faster in the test,
 states that the reason being it is stiffer in the bottom bracket area.  I
 would have expected the other bike to be the faster based upon previous
 tests that Jan has done for BQ.  The builder goes on to point out that his
 bike is the less comfortable of the two bikes being compared, also because
 of this stiffness. The results just seem counter to the concept of
 planing. I prefer to ride a more flexible frame, but not for the reason
 of pace.   Maybe Jan would like to expand more on this?

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Patrick in VT
On Monday, January 14, 2013 2:58:13 PM UTC-5, Skenry wrote:

  
 The only real way to compair weights is to have a frame built up with 
 normal duty heavy Riv-ish parts and then build it again with lighter 
 racing parts.  Then you'd be able to notice a weight diffence.
 Scott


If that's the case, I'll weigh in.  I have two identical steel frame bikes 
- same exact fit on both.  One has a full-on race build for CX and weighs 
about 17lbs.  The other has a stouter build for gravel-grinding/rough-stuff 
and is around at 20-21lbs - but is still worthy as a pit-bike for CX racing 
and/or fast club riding.  I absolutely notice a difference between the 
bikes, but that difference is irrelevant to 90% of riding I do ... it 
doesn't matter and I don't think about it.  We're talking seconds (and not 
a lot of them) on a long climb or a TT.  That's what any performance gain 
amounts to from dropping a few pounds off a go-fast bike, or a rider's 
weight for that matter.  Seconds.  Maybe a couple minutes on a long ride.  

In my experience, step function improvement in performance primarily comes 
from improved fitness/power, particularly functional threshold power 
(basically the max power one can sustain for an hour).  Far bigger gains in 
performance can be had there.  Would I rather shave 5lbs bike/body or 
increase my functional threshold power from 300w to 325w?  It's a 
no-brainer.  Lightweight might feel good, but being strong and fit feels 
better - in my case, to the point where I don't sweat a carrying a few 
extra pounds on my frame or a bike frame.  

It's not all that different with running.  A general rule of thumb that 
gets kicked around is 2 seconds per mile per extra pound of body weight.  
So if I weigh an extra 5lbs for a local 5k, i can expect to be about 30-45 
seconds slower unless I improved my run fitness along with the weight 
gain.  in any event, we're still talking seconds or maybe a couple of 
minutes on a 10 mile run.  doesn't matter unless it matters, like trying to 
qualify for the Boston marathon or if somebody is serious about setting 
personal records (which a lot of runners are).  


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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread eflayer
nicely said. when i discuss the difference in weight of my lightish steel 
and my still 4 lbs lighter carbon, i am never thinking about my measured 
performance or speed improvement. for me it is a more subtle appreciation 
of the overall quality of the ride. the unmeasured feel of getting up to 
speed faster and easier, standing up on the pedals and going like a rocket, 
and the seemingly overall ease when climbing something steep. completely 
unscientific, but i know it's true. 
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 8:33:36 AM UTC-8, Patrick in VT wrote:

 On Monday, January 14, 2013 2:58:13 PM UTC-5, Skenry wrote:

  
 The only real way to compair weights is to have a frame built up with 
 normal duty heavy Riv-ish parts and then build it again with lighter 
 racing parts.  Then you'd be able to notice a weight diffence.
 Scott


 If that's the case, I'll weigh in.  I have two identical steel frame bikes 
 - same exact fit on both.  One has a full-on race build for CX and weighs 
 about 17lbs.  The other has a stouter build for gravel-grinding/rough-stuff 
 and is around at 20-21lbs - but is still worthy as a pit-bike for CX racing 
 and/or fast club riding.  I absolutely notice a difference between the 
 bikes, but that difference is irrelevant to 90% of riding I do ... it 
 doesn't matter and I don't think about it.  We're talking seconds (and not 
 a lot of them) on a long climb or a TT.  That's what any performance gain 
 amounts to from dropping a few pounds off a go-fast bike, or a rider's 
 weight for that matter.  Seconds.  Maybe a couple minutes on a long ride.  

 In my experience, step function improvement in performance primarily comes 
 from improved fitness/power, particularly functional threshold power 
 (basically the max power one can sustain for an hour).  Far bigger gains in 
 performance can be had there.  Would I rather shave 5lbs bike/body or 
 increase my functional threshold power from 300w to 325w?  It's a 
 no-brainer.  Lightweight might feel good, but being strong and fit feels 
 better - in my case, to the point where I don't sweat a carrying a few 
 extra pounds on my frame or a bike frame.  

 It's not all that different with running.  A general rule of thumb that 
 gets kicked around is 2 seconds per mile per extra pound of body weight.  
 So if I weigh an extra 5lbs for a local 5k, i can expect to be about 30-45 
 seconds slower unless I improved my run fitness along with the weight 
 gain.  in any event, we're still talking seconds or maybe a couple of 
 minutes on a 10 mile run.  doesn't matter unless it matters, like trying to 
 qualify for the Boston marathon or if somebody is serious about setting 
 personal records (which a lot of runners are).  




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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Jan Heine
Patrick in VT wrote: Would I rather shave 5lbs bike/body or increase my 
functional threshold power from 300w to 325w?  It's a no-brainer.

You are absolutely right. And that is why frame flex is so important. 
Imagine a bike that allows you to put out 325W instead of 300W for the same 
fatigue! From our testing, that is how planing works - the frame isn't 
more efficient for a given power output, but our power outputs vary with 
different frames. From our observations, it appears that you build up less 
lactic acid when the frame smoothes your pedal stroke, by storing energy 
during the downstrokes and releasing it during the dead spots.

For those who think power output is constant, no matter the bike, it may 
help to think about pushing against a concrete wall. The wall doesn't move, 
so no work is done. Zero Watts. Yet you'll get tired pushing against the 
wall in no time. Similarly, if your frame doesn't move during the 
downstroke, it seems to limit how much power you can put into the system 
before the bike pushes back like that concrete wall. Then your legs start 
to hurt, and muscle fatigue limits your power output. On a bike that 
planes, your legs don't hurt, and your cardiovascular fitness becomes the 
(higher) limiting factor.

That explains why in our experience, performance correlates only very 
weakly with weight, but very strongly with optimized frame flex 
characteristics. (Of course, weight and optimized frame flex 
characteristics are correlated on most bikes, hence lightweight bikes often 
perform better than heavier ones.)

Jan Heine
Editor
Bicycle Quarterly

Follow our blog at http://janheine.wordpress.com/

On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 8:33:36 AM UTC-8, Patrick in VT wrote:

 On Monday, January 14, 2013 2:58:13 PM UTC-5, Skenry wrote:

  
 The only real way to compair weights is to have a frame built up with 
 normal duty heavy Riv-ish parts and then build it again with lighter 
 racing parts.  Then you'd be able to notice a weight diffence.
 Scott


 If that's the case, I'll weigh in.  I have two identical steel frame bikes 
 - same exact fit on both.  One has a full-on race build for CX and weighs 
 about 17lbs.  The other has a stouter build for gravel-grinding/rough-stuff 
 and is around at 20-21lbs - but is still worthy as a pit-bike for CX racing 
 and/or fast club riding.  I absolutely notice a difference between the 
 bikes, but that difference is irrelevant to 90% of riding I do ... it 
 doesn't matter and I don't think about it.  We're talking seconds (and not 
 a lot of them) on a long climb or a TT.  That's what any performance gain 
 amounts to from dropping a few pounds off a go-fast bike, or a rider's 
 weight for that matter.  Seconds.  Maybe a couple minutes on a long ride.  

 In my experience, step function improvement in performance primarily comes 
 from improved fitness/power, particularly functional threshold power 
 (basically the max power one can sustain for an hour).  Far bigger gains in 
 performance can be had there.  Would I rather shave 5lbs bike/body or 
 increase my functional threshold power from 300w to 325w?  It's a 
 no-brainer.  Lightweight might feel good, but being strong and fit feels 
 better - in my case, to the point where I don't sweat a carrying a few 
 extra pounds on my frame or a bike frame.  

 It's not all that different with running.  A general rule of thumb that 
 gets kicked around is 2 seconds per mile per extra pound of body weight.  
 So if I weigh an extra 5lbs for a local 5k, i can expect to be about 30-45 
 seconds slower unless I improved my run fitness along with the weight 
 gain.  in any event, we're still talking seconds or maybe a couple of 
 minutes on a 10 mile run.  doesn't matter unless it matters, like trying to 
 qualify for the Boston marathon or if somebody is serious about setting 
 personal records (which a lot of runners are).  




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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Jan Heine
On Monday, January 14, 2013 2:58:13 PM UTC-5, Skenry wrote:

  
 The only real way to compair weights is to have a frame built up with 
 normal duty heavy Riv-ish parts and then build it again with lighter 
 racing parts.  Then you'd be able to notice a weight diffence.
 Scott


You don't need to go through that much effort. You can just add a water 
bottle full of gravel to the lightweight bike. Compare it against a known 
rider on a known bike, before and after. We've done that multiple times in 
*Bicycle 
Quarterly's* bike tests, and the 4 pounds of gravel didn't make any 
noticeable difference in the performance of the bike.

When we first tested a bike made from superlight tubing, we were 
surprised how much better than my Alex Singer it climbed. Switching bikes 
back and forth, Mark and I found that whoever rode the superlight bike 
was faster. To make sure it wasn't the weight difference (one was a racing 
bike, the other a randonneur bike), we moved all the water bottles, food, 
etc. to the superlight bike, stuffing the rider's jersey pockets until 
the superlight bike was heavier than the Singer. The performance 
difference remained. Whoever rode the heavy superlight bike still was 
faster, and we switched back and forth multiple times.

The test method of switching bikes between well-matched riders is useful, 
because it accounts for environmental conditions (both ride side by side, 
so have the same wind, temperature, etc.) and fatigue (both riders fatigue 
at the same rate). This makes it easier to compare bikes than repeat runs 
up a hill, where it's obvious that Run 10 will be slower than Run 2, 
because the rider is getting tired.

Jan Heine
Editor
Bicycle Quarterly

Follow our blog at http://janheine.wordpress.com/
 

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Steve Palincsar
On Tue, 2013-01-15 at 09:08 -0800, Jan Heine wrote:
 
 That explains why in our experience, performance correlates only very
 weakly with weight, but very strongly with optimized frame flex
 characteristics. 

For a mind-blowing example of the above,  be sure to read the road test
of the titanium road bikes in the current issue of BQ.  (I'm going to
leave the big reveal to Jan, if he wants to pick up on the cue...)

 (Of course, weight and optimized frame flex characteristics are
 correlated on most bikes, hence lightweight bikes often perform better
 than heavier ones.)

But http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0vEgU88IQQ



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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Beside weight, tire quality and width, strength, and frame flex -- or,
better, suitability of frame for the rider: leaving these out, can anyone
speak (with meaning) about rider position, bike fit, and geometry suited
for rider position, and their relation to speed?

I come back to the Herse I owned: heavy, stiff, mediocre tires (at least my
take after riding them for a few K miles on two bikes): yet the Herse
seemed to encourage spirited riding in a way that other bikes of similar or
even lighter weight and tires no worse did not.

What I experienced on the Herse is what I experience on the two Riv
customs: they just feel right and let me pedal at higher cadences for
given perceived effort in a given gear or very close range of gears, again
compared to other bikes that don't have the same optimum fit and feel
quality. This includes the Motobecane which is made from light,
narrow-tubed 531; the H and 2 Rs are of stouter (and in the case of the
Rivs) larger diameter tubing.

Anyone?

On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 10:08 AM, Jan Heine hein...@earthlink.net wrote:

 Patrick in VT wrote: Would I rather shave 5lbs bike/body or increase my
 functional threshold power from 300w to 325w?  It's a no-brainer.

 You are absolutely right. And that is why frame flex is so important.
 Imagine a bike that allows you to put out 325W instead of 300W for the same
 fatigue! From our testing, that is how planing works - the frame isn't
 more efficient for a given power output, but our power outputs vary with
 different frames. From our observations, it appears that you build up less
 lactic acid when the frame smoothes your pedal stroke, by storing energy
 during the downstrokes and releasing it during the dead spots.

 For those who think power output is constant, no matter the bike, it may
 help to think about pushing against a concrete wall. The wall doesn't move,
 so no work is done. Zero Watts. Yet you'll get tired pushing against the
 wall in no time. Similarly, if your frame doesn't move during the
 downstroke, it seems to limit how much power you can put into the system
 before the bike pushes back like that concrete wall. Then your legs start
 to hurt, and muscle fatigue limits your power output. On a bike that
 planes, your legs don't hurt, and your cardiovascular fitness becomes the
 (higher) limiting factor.

 That explains why in our experience, performance correlates only very
 weakly with weight, but very strongly with optimized frame flex
 characteristics. (Of course, weight and optimized frame flex
 characteristics are correlated on most bikes, hence lightweight bikes often
 perform better than heavier ones.)

 Jan Heine
 Editor
 Bicycle Quarterly

 Follow our blog at http://janheine.wordpress.com/


 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 8:33:36 AM UTC-8, Patrick in VT wrote:

 On Monday, January 14, 2013 2:58:13 PM UTC-5, Skenry wrote:


 The only real way to compair weights is to have a frame built up with
 normal duty heavy Riv-ish parts and then build it again with lighter
 racing parts.  Then you'd be able to notice a weight diffence.
 Scott


 If that's the case, I'll weigh in.  I have two identical steel frame
 bikes - same exact fit on both.  One has a full-on race build for CX and
 weighs about 17lbs.  The other has a stouter build for
 gravel-grinding/rough-stuff and is around at 20-21lbs - but is still worthy
 as a pit-bike for CX racing and/or fast club riding.  I absolutely notice a
 difference between the bikes, but that difference is irrelevant to 90% of
 riding I do ... it doesn't matter and I don't think about it.  We're
 talking seconds (and not a lot of them) on a long climb or a TT.  That's
 what any performance gain amounts to from dropping a few pounds off a
 go-fast bike, or a rider's weight for that matter.  Seconds.  Maybe a
 couple minutes on a long ride.

 In my experience, step function improvement in performance primarily
 comes from improved fitness/power, particularly functional threshold power
 (basically the max power one can sustain for an hour).  Far bigger gains in
 performance can be had there.  Would I rather shave 5lbs bike/body or
 increase my functional threshold power from 300w to 325w?  It's a
 no-brainer.  Lightweight might feel good, but being strong and fit feels
 better - in my case, to the point where I don't sweat a carrying a few
 extra pounds on my frame or a bike frame.

 It's not all that different with running.  A general rule of thumb that
 gets kicked around is 2 seconds per mile per extra pound of body weight.
 So if I weigh an extra 5lbs for a local 5k, i can expect to be about 30-45
 seconds slower unless I improved my run fitness along with the weight
 gain.  in any event, we're still talking seconds or maybe a couple of
 minutes on a 10 mile run.  doesn't matter unless it matters, like trying to
 qualify for the Boston marathon or if somebody is serious about setting
 personal records (which a lot of runners are).


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 You received this message because you are 

Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Addendum: Since I've experienced this fit/feel-cum-speed thing over almost
15 years with the '99 and for almost 10 with the '03, I think I can
discount psychology. With the Herse, the immediate feeling was: How like
the Rivs!

Shoulda kept it -- except that I needed the $$. I hope the Ram ends up
feeling as good -- and! That it does not end up costing as much as the
Herse. So far, it's much less.

On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 11:13 AM, PATRICK MOORE bertin...@gmail.com wrote:

 Beside weight, tire quality and width, strength, and frame flex -- or,
 better, suitability of frame for the rider: leaving these out, can anyone
 speak (with meaning) about rider position, bike fit, and geometry suited
 for rider position, and their relation to speed?

 I come back to the Herse I owned: heavy, stiff, mediocre tires (at least
 my take after riding them for a few K miles on two bikes): yet the Herse
 seemed to encourage spirited riding in a way that other bikes of similar or
 even lighter weight and tires no worse did not.

 What I experienced on the Herse is what I experience on the two Riv
 customs: they just feel right and let me pedal at higher cadences for
 given perceived effort in a given gear or very close range of gears, again
 compared to other bikes that don't have the same optimum fit and feel
 quality. This includes the Motobecane which is made from light,
 narrow-tubed 531; the H and 2 Rs are of stouter (and in the case of the
 Rivs) larger diameter tubing.

 Anyone?


 On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 10:08 AM, Jan Heine hein...@earthlink.net wrote:

 Patrick in VT wrote: Would I rather shave 5lbs bike/body or increase my
 functional threshold power from 300w to 325w?  It's a no-brainer.

 You are absolutely right. And that is why frame flex is so important.
 Imagine a bike that allows you to put out 325W instead of 300W for the same
 fatigue! From our testing, that is how planing works - the frame isn't
 more efficient for a given power output, but our power outputs vary with
 different frames. From our observations, it appears that you build up less
 lactic acid when the frame smoothes your pedal stroke, by storing energy
 during the downstrokes and releasing it during the dead spots.

 For those who think power output is constant, no matter the bike, it may
 help to think about pushing against a concrete wall. The wall doesn't move,
 so no work is done. Zero Watts. Yet you'll get tired pushing against the
 wall in no time. Similarly, if your frame doesn't move during the
 downstroke, it seems to limit how much power you can put into the system
 before the bike pushes back like that concrete wall. Then your legs start
 to hurt, and muscle fatigue limits your power output. On a bike that
 planes, your legs don't hurt, and your cardiovascular fitness becomes the
 (higher) limiting factor.

 That explains why in our experience, performance correlates only very
 weakly with weight, but very strongly with optimized frame flex
 characteristics. (Of course, weight and optimized frame flex
 characteristics are correlated on most bikes, hence lightweight bikes often
 perform better than heavier ones.)

 Jan Heine
 Editor
 Bicycle Quarterly

 Follow our blog at http://janheine.wordpress.com/


 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 8:33:36 AM UTC-8, Patrick in VT wrote:

 On Monday, January 14, 2013 2:58:13 PM UTC-5, Skenry wrote:


 The only real way to compair weights is to have a frame built up with
 normal duty heavy Riv-ish parts and then build it again with lighter
 racing parts.  Then you'd be able to notice a weight diffence.
 Scott


 If that's the case, I'll weigh in.  I have two identical steel frame
 bikes - same exact fit on both.  One has a full-on race build for CX and
 weighs about 17lbs.  The other has a stouter build for
 gravel-grinding/rough-stuff and is around at 20-21lbs - but is still worthy
 as a pit-bike for CX racing and/or fast club riding.  I absolutely notice a
 difference between the bikes, but that difference is irrelevant to 90% of
 riding I do ... it doesn't matter and I don't think about it.  We're
 talking seconds (and not a lot of them) on a long climb or a TT.  That's
 what any performance gain amounts to from dropping a few pounds off a
 go-fast bike, or a rider's weight for that matter.  Seconds.  Maybe a
 couple minutes on a long ride.

 In my experience, step function improvement in performance primarily
 comes from improved fitness/power, particularly functional threshold power
 (basically the max power one can sustain for an hour).  Far bigger gains in
 performance can be had there.  Would I rather shave 5lbs bike/body or
 increase my functional threshold power from 300w to 325w?  It's a
 no-brainer.  Lightweight might feel good, but being strong and fit feels
 better - in my case, to the point where I don't sweat a carrying a few
 extra pounds on my frame or a bike frame.

 It's not all that different with running.  A general rule of thumb that
 gets kicked around is 2 seconds per mile 

Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Oh! One last thing: How like the Rivs! I mean in the kind of feel that
makes you pedal more effectively. I **don't** mean handling. It was fine,
but not great -- *that's* another big reason for selling.

On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 11:17 AM, PATRICK MOORE bertin...@gmail.com wrote:

 Addendum: Since I've experienced this fit/feel-cum-speed thing over almost
 15 years with the '99 and for almost 10 with the '03, I think I can
 discount psychology. With the Herse, the immediate feeling was: How like
 the Rivs!

 Shoulda kept it -- except that I needed the $$. I hope the Ram ends up
 feeling as good -- and! That it does not end up costing as much as the
 Herse. So far, it's much less.


 On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 11:13 AM, PATRICK MOORE bertin...@gmail.comwrote:

 Beside weight, tire quality and width, strength, and frame flex -- or,
 better, suitability of frame for the rider: leaving these out, can anyone
 speak (with meaning) about rider position, bike fit, and geometry suited
 for rider position, and their relation to speed?

 I come back to the Herse I owned: heavy, stiff, mediocre tires (at least
 my take after riding them for a few K miles on two bikes): yet the Herse
 seemed to encourage spirited riding in a way that other bikes of similar or
 even lighter weight and tires no worse did not.

 What I experienced on the Herse is what I experience on the two Riv
 customs: they just feel right and let me pedal at higher cadences for
 given perceived effort in a given gear or very close range of gears, again
 compared to other bikes that don't have the same optimum fit and feel
 quality. This includes the Motobecane which is made from light,
 narrow-tubed 531; the H and 2 Rs are of stouter (and in the case of the
 Rivs) larger diameter tubing.

 Anyone?


 On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 10:08 AM, Jan Heine hein...@earthlink.netwrote:

 Patrick in VT wrote: Would I rather shave 5lbs bike/body or increase my
 functional threshold power from 300w to 325w?  It's a no-brainer.

 You are absolutely right. And that is why frame flex is so important.
 Imagine a bike that allows you to put out 325W instead of 300W for the same
 fatigue! From our testing, that is how planing works - the frame isn't
 more efficient for a given power output, but our power outputs vary with
 different frames. From our observations, it appears that you build up less
 lactic acid when the frame smoothes your pedal stroke, by storing energy
 during the downstrokes and releasing it during the dead spots.

 For those who think power output is constant, no matter the bike, it may
 help to think about pushing against a concrete wall. The wall doesn't move,
 so no work is done. Zero Watts. Yet you'll get tired pushing against the
 wall in no time. Similarly, if your frame doesn't move during the
 downstroke, it seems to limit how much power you can put into the system
 before the bike pushes back like that concrete wall. Then your legs start
 to hurt, and muscle fatigue limits your power output. On a bike that
 planes, your legs don't hurt, and your cardiovascular fitness becomes the
 (higher) limiting factor.

 That explains why in our experience, performance correlates only very
 weakly with weight, but very strongly with optimized frame flex
 characteristics. (Of course, weight and optimized frame flex
 characteristics are correlated on most bikes, hence lightweight bikes often
 perform better than heavier ones.)

 Jan Heine
 Editor
 Bicycle Quarterly

 Follow our blog at http://janheine.wordpress.com/


 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 8:33:36 AM UTC-8, Patrick in VT wrote:

 On Monday, January 14, 2013 2:58:13 PM UTC-5, Skenry wrote:


 The only real way to compair weights is to have a frame built up with
 normal duty heavy Riv-ish parts and then build it again with lighter
 racing parts.  Then you'd be able to notice a weight diffence.
 Scott


 If that's the case, I'll weigh in.  I have two identical steel frame
 bikes - same exact fit on both.  One has a full-on race build for CX and
 weighs about 17lbs.  The other has a stouter build for
 gravel-grinding/rough-stuff and is around at 20-21lbs - but is still worthy
 as a pit-bike for CX racing and/or fast club riding.  I absolutely notice a
 difference between the bikes, but that difference is irrelevant to 90% of
 riding I do ... it doesn't matter and I don't think about it.  We're
 talking seconds (and not a lot of them) on a long climb or a TT.  That's
 what any performance gain amounts to from dropping a few pounds off a
 go-fast bike, or a rider's weight for that matter.  Seconds.  Maybe a
 couple minutes on a long ride.

 In my experience, step function improvement in performance primarily
 comes from improved fitness/power, particularly functional threshold power
 (basically the max power one can sustain for an hour).  Far bigger gains in
 performance can be had there.  Would I rather shave 5lbs bike/body or
 increase my functional threshold power from 300w to 325w?  It's a
 no-brainer.  

Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Patrick in VT
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 12:18:52 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:


 For a mind-blowing example of the above,  be sure to read the road test 
 of the titanium road bikes in the current issue of BQ.  (I'm going to 
 leave the big reveal to Jan, if he wants to pick up on the cue...) 


i'm inclined to believe that frames of any material can have optimized 
frame flex characteristics as far as performance is concerned.  all the 
talk regarding stiffness with respect to racing bikes seems a little 
overdone, if not a little misleading, since removing material - be it 
steel, CF or Ti - from the frame to put them at combat weight must also 
reduce stiffness to some degree, esp. when that the bulk of that weight is 
in the main tubes.  i'm not 100% on that, but would agree with Jan that it 
points to a correlation with weight and flex.

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Kelly
Also a quick measure can be found here... 
http://bikecalculator.com

Enjoy

On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 11:15:47 AM UTC-6, Jan Heine wrote:

 On Monday, January 14, 2013 2:58:13 PM UTC-5, Skenry wrote:

  
 The only real way to compair weights is to have a frame built up with 
 normal duty heavy Riv-ish parts and then build it again with lighter 
 racing parts.  Then you'd be able to notice a weight diffence.
 Scott


 You don't need to go through that much effort. You can just add a water 
 bottle full of gravel to the lightweight bike. Compare it against a known 
 rider on a known bike, before and after. We've done that multiple times in 
 *Bicycle Quarterly's* bike tests, and the 4 pounds of gravel didn't make 
 any noticeable difference in the performance of the bike.

 When we first tested a bike made from superlight tubing, we were 
 surprised how much better than my Alex Singer it climbed. Switching bikes 
 back and forth, Mark and I found that whoever rode the superlight bike 
 was faster. To make sure it wasn't the weight difference (one was a racing 
 bike, the other a randonneur bike), we moved all the water bottles, food, 
 etc. to the superlight bike, stuffing the rider's jersey pockets until 
 the superlight bike was heavier than the Singer. The performance 
 difference remained. Whoever rode the heavy superlight bike still was 
 faster, and we switched back and forth multiple times.

 The test method of switching bikes between well-matched riders is useful, 
 because it accounts for environmental conditions (both ride side by side, 
 so have the same wind, temperature, etc.) and fatigue (both riders fatigue 
 at the same rate). This makes it easier to compare bikes than repeat runs 
 up a hill, where it's obvious that Run 10 will be slower than Run 2, 
 because the rider is getting tired.

 Jan Heine
 Editor
 Bicycle Quarterly

 Follow our blog at http://janheine.wordpress.com/
  


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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread eflayer
Just in case anyone is interested, my 2009 Specialized S-Works Roubaix 
frameset is now on ebay. My favorite ride in the last 10 years has now been 
replaced with the next size up.
On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:

 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. To 
 abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36 
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The 
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front 
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 

 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast 
 bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive 
 geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes 
 off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, I 
 got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each bike 
 was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 

 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but 
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike 
 than I might have guessed. 


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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Scott Henry
Please post the link

Scott


On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 4:14 PM, eflayer eddie.fla...@att.net wrote:

 Just in case anyone is interested, my 2009 Specialized S-Works Roubaix
 frameset is now on ebay. My favorite ride in the last 10 years has now been
 replaced with the next size up.

 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:

 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. To
 abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags.

 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast
 bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive
 geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes
 off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, I
 got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each bike
 was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma.

 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike
 than I might have guessed.

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread eflayer
http://my.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MyEbaygbh=1CurrentPage=MyeBayAllSellingssPageName=STRK:ME:LNLK:MESX
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 1:24:33 PM UTC-8, Skenry wrote:

 Please post the link
  
 Scott


 On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 4:14 PM, eflayer eddie@att.net 
 javascript:wrote:

 Just in case anyone is interested, my 2009 Specialized S-Works Roubaix 
 frameset is now on ebay. My favorite ride in the last 10 years has now been 
 replaced with the next size up.

 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:

 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. 
 To abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36 
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The 
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front 
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 

 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast 
 bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive 
 geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes 
 off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, 
 I got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each 
 bike was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 

 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but 
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike 
 than I might have guessed. 

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 RBW Owners Bunch group.
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 rbw-owne...@googlegroups.comjavascript:
 .
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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread William
My man eflayer posted a link.  I clicked it and it didn't work.  But I did 
find his auction:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/2009-Specialized-Roubaix-S-Works-frameset-58-/150980228930?pt=Road_Bikeshash=item23271f7742



On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 2:24:48 PM UTC-8, eflayer wrote:


 http://my.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MyEbaygbh=1CurrentPage=MyeBayAllSellingssPageName=STRK:ME:LNLK:MESX
 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 1:24:33 PM UTC-8, Skenry wrote:

 Please post the link
  
 Scott


 On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 4:14 PM, eflayer eddie@att.net wrote:

 Just in case anyone is interested, my 2009 Specialized S-Works Roubaix 
 frameset is now on ebay. My favorite ride in the last 10 years has now been 
 replaced with the next size up.

 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:

 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. 
 To abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36 
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The 
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front 
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 

 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast 
 bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive 
 geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes 
 off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, 
 I got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each 
 bike was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 

 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but 
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike 
 than I might have guessed. 

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 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google 
 Groups RBW Owners Bunch group.
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RE: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Allingham II, Thomas J
There must be beauty in that frame to many eyes, but it escapes me.  But then, 
I'm turning 60 in 3 weeks, and officially entering curmudgeonhood.

From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com 
[mailto:rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of William
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 6:42 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

My man eflayer posted a link.  I clicked it and it didn't work.  But I did find 
his auction:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/2009-Specialized-Roubaix-S-Works-frameset-58-/150980228930?pt=Road_Bikeshash=item23271f7742



On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 2:24:48 PM UTC-8, eflayer wrote:
http://my.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MyEbaygbh=1CurrentPage=MyeBayAllSellingssPageName=STRK:ME:LNLK:MESX
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 1:24:33 PM UTC-8, Skenry wrote:
Please post the link

Scott

On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 4:14 PM, eflayer 
eddie@att.netmailto:eddie@att.net wrote:
Just in case anyone is interested, my 2009 Specialized S-Works Roubaix frameset 
is now on ebay. My favorite ride in the last 10 years has now been replaced 
with the next size up.

On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:
I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. To 
abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36 
drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The Soma's 
got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front rack, front 
and rear Sackville bags.

Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast bike 
with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive geometry 
(shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes off like crazy 
and feels incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, I got one of those hook 
scale things today, and the total weight of each bike was 35lbs for the Sam and 
31lbs for the Soma.

I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but clearly 
that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but there must be 
far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike than I might have 
guessed.
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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread eflayer
that weird as it works when i click on it in your message and my message.
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:41:41 PM UTC-8, William wrote:

 My man eflayer posted a link.  I clicked it and it didn't work.  But I did 
 find his auction:


 http://www.ebay.com/itm/2009-Specialized-Roubaix-S-Works-frameset-58-/150980228930?pt=Road_Bikeshash=item23271f7742



 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 2:24:48 PM UTC-8, eflayer wrote:


 http://my.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MyEbaygbh=1CurrentPage=MyeBayAllSellingssPageName=STRK:ME:LNLK:MESX
 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 1:24:33 PM UTC-8, Skenry wrote:

 Please post the link
  
 Scott


 On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 4:14 PM, eflayer eddie@att.net wrote:

 Just in case anyone is interested, my 2009 Specialized S-Works Roubaix 
 frameset is now on ebay. My favorite ride in the last 10 years has now 
 been 
 replaced with the next size up.

 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:

 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. 
 To abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 
 12-36 
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The 
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front 
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 

 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight 
 go-fast bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more 
 aggressive geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it 
 just takes off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. 
 Lo-and-behold, I got one of those hook scale things today, and the total 
 weight of each bike was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 

 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but 
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each 
 bike 
 than I might have guessed. 

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread eflayer
i much prefer the look of fine steel and own two and have owned many, many 
more. i am still not that fond of the looks of modern monococked carbon, 
but do really enjoy the ride.
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:49:08 PM UTC-8, Pudge wrote:

  There must be beauty in that frame to many eyes, but it escapes me.  But 
 then, I’m turning 60 in 3 weeks, and officially entering curmudgeonhood.

  

 *From:* rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *William
 *Sent:* Tuesday, January 15, 2013 6:42 PM
 *To:* rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

  

 My man eflayer posted a link.  I clicked it and it didn't work.  But I did 
 find his auction:
  
  
  

 http://www.ebay.com/itm/2009-Specialized-Roubaix-S-Works-frameset-58-/150980228930?pt=Road_Bikeshash=item23271f7742
  
  
  


 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 2:24:48 PM UTC-8, eflayer wrote:


 http://my.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MyEbaygbh=1CurrentPage=MyeBayAllSellingssPageName=STRK:ME:LNLK:MESX
 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 1:24:33 PM UTC-8, Skenry wrote:
  
 Please post the link
  
  
  
 Scott
   
  
  
 On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 4:14 PM, eflayer eddie@att.net wrote:

 Just in case anyone is interested, my 2009 Specialized S-Works Roubaix 
 frameset is now on ebay. My favorite ride in the last 10 years has now been 
 replaced with the next size up.
  

 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:
  
 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. To 
 abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36 
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The 
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front 
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 
  
  
  
 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast 
 bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive 
 geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes 
 off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, I 
 got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each bike 
 was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 
  
  
  
 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but 
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike 
 than I might have guessed. 
  
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 To ensure compliance with Treasury Department regulations, we advise you 
 that, unless otherwise expressly indicated, any federal tax advice 
 contained in this message was not intended or written to be used, and 
 cannot be used, for the purpose of (i) avoiding tax-related penalties under 
 the Internal Revenue Code or applicable state or local tax law provisions 
 or (ii) promoting, marketing or recommending to another party any 
 tax-related matters addressed herein.
 
 

 This email (and any attachments thereto) is intended only for use by the 
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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread William
eflayer

That's I'm not you.  Only you are you.  :-)  

When you click your link, it goes to My Ebay.  When I click on your link, 
it goes to My Ebay.  I'm not selling a Roubaix frameset, so My Ebay 
isn't the way for me to get there.  

On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:50:46 PM UTC-8, eflayer wrote:

 that weird as it works when i click on it in your message and my message.
 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:41:41 PM UTC-8, William wrote:

 My man eflayer posted a link.  I clicked it and it didn't work.  But I 
 did find his auction:


 http://www.ebay.com/itm/2009-Specialized-Roubaix-S-Works-frameset-58-/150980228930?pt=Road_Bikeshash=item23271f7742



 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 2:24:48 PM UTC-8, eflayer wrote:


 http://my.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MyEbaygbh=1CurrentPage=MyeBayAllSellingssPageName=STRK:ME:LNLK:MESX
 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 1:24:33 PM UTC-8, Skenry wrote:

 Please post the link
  
 Scott


 On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 4:14 PM, eflayer eddie@att.net wrote:

 Just in case anyone is interested, my 2009 Specialized S-Works Roubaix 
 frameset is now on ebay. My favorite ride in the last 10 years has now 
 been 
 replaced with the next size up.

 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:

 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double 
 Cross. To abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 
 40/24 
 12-36 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. 
 The Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, 
 front rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 

 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight 
 go-fast bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more 
 aggressive geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, 
 it 
 just takes off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. 
 Lo-and-behold, I got one of those hook scale things today, and the total 
 weight of each bike was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 

 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, 
 but clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, 
 but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each 
 bike 
 than I might have guessed. 

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread William
News flash.  My man Pudge has retro-grouch tendencies.  Show us your 
beer-truck again!




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RE: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Allingham II, Thomas J
Which one, Bill - they're all slow and load-carrying.  It's just a question of 
a six, a case, or a keg

From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com 
[mailto:rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of William
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 6:58 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

News flash.  My man Pudge has retro-grouch tendencies.  Show us your beer-truck 
again!


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RE: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Allingham II, Thomas J
Eflayer's response does make me think I gotta ride on of those things at least 
once in my life.  But gateway drugs frighten me...

From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com 
[mailto:rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of William
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 6:58 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

News flash.  My man Pudge has retro-grouch tendencies.  Show us your beer-truck 
again!


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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread eflayer
Dudes. I did not ride one of those until I was 61 years old.
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 4:00:29 PM UTC-8, Pudge wrote:

  Eflayer’s response does make me think I gotta ride on of those things at 
 least once in my life.  But gateway drugs frighten me…

  

 *From:* rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *William
 *Sent:* Tuesday, January 15, 2013 6:58 PM
 *To:* rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

  

 News flash.  My man Pudge has retro-grouch tendencies.  Show us your 
 beer-truck again!
  
  
  
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RE: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Allingham II, Thomas J
Ah, there's hope for  yet!

From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com 
[mailto:rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of eflayer
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 7:18 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

Dudes. I did not ride one of those until I was 61 years old.
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 4:00:29 PM UTC-8, Pudge wrote:
Eflayer's response does make me think I gotta ride on of those things at least 
once in my life.  But gateway drugs frighten me...

From: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.comjavascript: 
[mailto:rbw-owne...@googlegroups.comjavascript:] On Behalf Of William
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 6:58 PM
To: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.comjavascript:
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

News flash.  My man Pudge has retro-grouch tendencies.  Show us your beer-truck 
again!


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RE: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Allingham II, Thomas J
For me yet, that is

From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com 
[mailto:rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Allingham II, Thomas J
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 7:18 PM
To: 'rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com'
Subject: RE: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

Ah, there's hope for  yet!

From: 
rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.commailto:rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com 
[mailto:rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of eflayer
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 7:18 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.commailto:rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

Dudes. I did not ride one of those until I was 61 years old.
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 4:00:29 PM UTC-8, Pudge wrote:
Eflayer's response does make me think I gotta ride on of those things at least 
once in my life.  But gateway drugs frighten me...

From: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.comjavascript: 
[mailto:rbw-owne...@googlegroups.comjavascript:] On Behalf Of William
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 6:58 PM
To: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.comjavascript:
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

News flash.  My man Pudge has retro-grouch tendencies.  Show us your beer-truck 
again!


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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread William
Pudge tells me to jump, and I ask How High?
I tell Pudge to show his beer-truck and he asks Which One?

perfecto!

On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:59:18 PM UTC-8, Pudge wrote:

  Which one, Bill – they’re all slow and load-carrying.  It’s just a 
 question of a six, a case, or a keg….

  

 *From:* rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com javascript: [mailto:
 rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com javascript:] *On Behalf Of *William
 *Sent:* Tuesday, January 15, 2013 6:58 PM
 *To:* rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com javascript:
 *Subject:* Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

  

 News flash.  My man Pudge has retro-grouch tendencies.  Show us your 
 beer-truck again!
  
  
  
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RE: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Marc Schwartz
Its still not weird enough for me  ; )

...abide..

From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com [rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com] on 
behalf of William [tapebu...@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 6:14 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

Pudge tells me to jump, and I ask How High?
I tell Pudge to show his beer-truck and he asks Which One?

perfecto!

On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:59:18 PM UTC-8, Pudge wrote:
Which one, Bill – they’re all slow and load-carrying.  It’s just a question of 
a six, a case, or a keg….

From: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com [mailto:rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com] On 
Behalf Of William
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 6:58 PM
To: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

News flash.  My man Pudge has retro-grouch tendencies.  Show us your beer-truck 
again!


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RE: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
I wish there was a like button.

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread Mike Schiller
Bill, maybe you should sell your Roubaix... it would be closer to Pudge's 
size.

~mike

On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:56:06 PM UTC-8, William wrote:

 eflayer

 That's I'm not you.  Only you are you.  :-)  

 When you click your link, it goes to My Ebay.  When I click on your 
 link, it goes to My Ebay.  I'm not selling a Roubaix frameset, so My 
 Ebay isn't the way for me to get there.  

 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:50:46 PM UTC-8, eflayer wrote:

 that weird as it works when i click on it in your message and my message.
 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 3:41:41 PM UTC-8, William wrote:

 My man eflayer posted a link.  I clicked it and it didn't work.  But I 
 did find his auction:


 http://www.ebay.com/itm/2009-Specialized-Roubaix-S-Works-frameset-58-/150980228930?pt=Road_Bikeshash=item23271f7742



 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 2:24:48 PM UTC-8, eflayer wrote:


 http://my.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MyEbaygbh=1CurrentPage=MyeBayAllSellingssPageName=STRK:ME:LNLK:MESX
 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 1:24:33 PM UTC-8, Skenry wrote:

 Please post the link
  
 Scott


 On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 4:14 PM, eflayer eddie@att.net wrote:

 Just in case anyone is interested, my 2009 Specialized S-Works 
 Roubaix frameset is now on ebay. My favorite ride in the last 10 years 
 has 
 now been replaced with the next size up.

 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:

 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double 
 Cross. To abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 
 40/24 
 12-36 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front 
 rack/basket/Shopsack. 
 The Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, 
 front rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 

 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight 
 go-fast bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more 
 aggressive geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, 
 it 
 just takes off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. 
 Lo-and-behold, I got one of those hook scale things today, and the 
 total 
 weight of each bike was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 

 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, 
 but clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, 
 but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each 
 bike 
 than I might have guessed. 

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-15 Thread charlie
I think this whole frame flex business has something to do with rider power 
and weight also. I don't believe a super light tubed frame would last long 
with me riding it and would most likely develop cracks sooner. Were I 165 
pounds again maybe not but the average beginner male cyclist over 40 who is 
able to afford a pricey frame probably doesn't weigh that 
either..probably closer to 200 I'd wager. Just wanted to put a dose of 
reality into perhaps why the G-man makes stouter frames that many. Do they 
perform significantly worse than a skinny, thin tubed frame? I don't know 
but I'll bet we'd be splitting some pretty fine hairs.

On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 10:26:55 AM UTC-8, Patrick in VT wrote:

 On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 12:18:52 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:


 For a mind-blowing example of the above,  be sure to read the road test 
 of the titanium road bikes in the current issue of BQ.  (I'm going to 
 leave the big reveal to Jan, if he wants to pick up on the cue...) 


 i'm inclined to believe that frames of any material can have optimized 
 frame flex characteristics as far as performance is concerned.  all the 
 talk regarding stiffness with respect to racing bikes seems a little 
 overdone, if not a little misleading, since removing material - be it 
 steel, CF or Ti - from the frame to put them at combat weight must also 
 reduce stiffness to some degree, esp. when that the bulk of that weight is 
 in the main tubes.  i'm not 100% on that, but would agree with Jan that it 
 points to a correlation with weight and flex.


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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread Steve Palincsar
On Sun, 2013-01-13 at 20:13 -0800, eflayer wrote:
 I was surprised the OP did not think that pounds of extra weight might
 not be responsible for the go fast feel of his go fast bike...even
 though by some standards both are relatively heavy. But 4 pounds is 4
 pounds. I was suggesting weight is a significant factor in the gestalt
 of how a bike rides and feels to the rider.

I don't think so.  Does your bike feel different when ridden with full
vs. no water bottles, or with full vs. empty water bottles?  I doubt you
could make any guess at all about the state of your water supply from
the way your bike feels.  

Frame stiffness, now that's a totally different story, and one that is
largely independent of weight.  Different tires can make a bike feel
very different, too -- and again, not because of any weight difference.

I'm confident if someone loaded the water bottles on your Specialized
with lead shot to bring it up to the weight of your other bike, it would
still feel different and better to you.



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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread eflayer
now that is an interesting proposal. i'd bet against you on that one though 
:)
On Monday, January 14, 2013 6:24:34 AM UTC-8, Steve Palincsar wrote:

 On Sun, 2013-01-13 at 20:13 -0800, eflayer wrote: 
  I was surprised the OP did not think that pounds of extra weight might 
  not be responsible for the go fast feel of his go fast bike...even 
  though by some standards both are relatively heavy. But 4 pounds is 4 
  pounds. I was suggesting weight is a significant factor in the gestalt 
  of how a bike rides and feels to the rider. 

 I don't think so.  Does your bike feel different when ridden with full 
 vs. no water bottles, or with full vs. empty water bottles?  I doubt you 
 could make any guess at all about the state of your water supply from 
 the way your bike feels.   

 Frame stiffness, now that's a totally different story, and one that is 
 largely independent of weight.  Different tires can make a bike feel 
 very different, too -- and again, not because of any weight difference. 

 I'm confident if someone loaded the water bottles on your Specialized 
 with lead shot to bring it up to the weight of your other bike, it would 
 still feel different and better to you. 





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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread Matthew J
I have two Abus Bordo locks.  One is the very heavy Granite, the other the 
new ultra-light.
 
I got the ultra-light version for my Kellogg / Spectrum road bike.  
Typically the only time I stop when on that bike is to pick up a drink or 
what not, so lock security is not an issue.  I like the lighter Bordo for 
this bike as there is less chance of it will scratch the paint.
 
A while back I was having work done on my city bike so I took the Kellogg 
to an appointment.  The Bordo Granite easily adds a pound over the 
ultra-light.  I cannot say I noticed any difference at all in the ride of 
the bike.
 
Switching from the Grand Boid Cerfs to 700x32 Extra Legers - Wow - that 
makes a difference!

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread William
My money is with Steve Palinscar.  

This reminds me of a long debate/argument I had with a coworker at the bike 
shop.  My coworker, Greg, insisted that an 18lb road bike was way faster 
than a 20lb road bike.  That's a commonly held position, as we all know.  I 
pointed out what I believe to be true that losing 2lbs off your body is 
equivalent to losing 2lbs off your bike.  That's another commonly held 
position, as we've all heard and read a dozen times.  This is where the 
debate got weird.  

Greg insisted that 2lbs off the bike is 10%, and therefore is equivalent to 
losing 10% of the rider's body weight.  an 18lb bike is way faster than a 
20lb bike because it is 10% lighter.  A 180lb rider is way faster than a 
200lb rider, because he is 10% lighter.  So it is more effective to lose a 
pound off the bike than it is off the body.  

I tried to counter his argument with the absurd example.  If mid climb, you 
took your full water bottle off your bike and put it in your jersey pocket, 
would you feel an instant rush of speed because the bike got 10% lighter 
and the rider got 1% heavier?  Greg insisted ABSOLUTELY YES, you would feel 
a burst of speed.  The debate devolved from there.  Greg insisted heavy 
shoes and light pedals is way faster since the pedal is part of the bike 
and the shoe is a part of the rider.  He explained that cleats are special, 
where the weight is shared.  My head exploded shortly thereafter and the 
argument ended.  

On Monday, January 14, 2013 11:10:01 AM UTC-8, eflayer wrote:

 now that is an interesting proposal. i'd bet against you on that one 
 though :)
 On Monday, January 14, 2013 6:24:34 AM UTC-8, Steve Palincsar wrote:

 On Sun, 2013-01-13 at 20:13 -0800, eflayer wrote: 
  I was surprised the OP did not think that pounds of extra weight might 
  not be responsible for the go fast feel of his go fast bike...even 
  though by some standards both are relatively heavy. But 4 pounds is 4 
  pounds. I was suggesting weight is a significant factor in the gestalt 
  of how a bike rides and feels to the rider. 

 I don't think so.  Does your bike feel different when ridden with full 
 vs. no water bottles, or with full vs. empty water bottles?  I doubt you 
 could make any guess at all about the state of your water supply from 
 the way your bike feels.   

 Frame stiffness, now that's a totally different story, and one that is 
 largely independent of weight.  Different tires can make a bike feel 
 very different, too -- and again, not because of any weight difference. 

 I'm confident if someone loaded the water bottles on your Specialized 
 with lead shot to bring it up to the weight of your other bike, it would 
 still feel different and better to you. 





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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread Peter Morgano
Maybe Greg spent too much time around the Framesaver. I hear it can kill
brain cells, haha.

On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 2:42 PM, William tapebu...@gmail.com wrote:

 My money is with Steve Palinscar.

 This reminds me of a long debate/argument I had with a coworker at the
 bike shop.  My coworker, Greg, insisted that an 18lb road bike was way
 faster than a 20lb road bike.  That's a commonly held position, as we all
 know.  I pointed out what I believe to be true that losing 2lbs off your
 body is equivalent to losing 2lbs off your bike.  That's another commonly
 held position, as we've all heard and read a dozen times.  This is where
 the debate got weird.

 Greg insisted that 2lbs off the bike is 10%, and therefore is equivalent
 to losing 10% of the rider's body weight.  an 18lb bike is way faster than
 a 20lb bike because it is 10% lighter.  A 180lb rider is way faster than a
 200lb rider, because he is 10% lighter.  So it is more effective to lose a
 pound off the bike than it is off the body.

 I tried to counter his argument with the absurd example.  If mid climb,
 you took your full water bottle off your bike and put it in your jersey
 pocket, would you feel an instant rush of speed because the bike got 10%
 lighter and the rider got 1% heavier?  Greg insisted ABSOLUTELY YES, you
 would feel a burst of speed.  The debate devolved from there.  Greg
 insisted heavy shoes and light pedals is way faster since the pedal is part
 of the bike and the shoe is a part of the rider.  He explained that cleats
 are special, where the weight is shared.  My head exploded shortly
 thereafter and the argument ended.

 On Monday, January 14, 2013 11:10:01 AM UTC-8, eflayer wrote:

 now that is an interesting proposal. i'd bet against you on that one
 though :)
 On Monday, January 14, 2013 6:24:34 AM UTC-8, Steve Palincsar wrote:

 On Sun, 2013-01-13 at 20:13 -0800, eflayer wrote:
  I was surprised the OP did not think that pounds of extra weight might
  not be responsible for the go fast feel of his go fast bike...even
  though by some standards both are relatively heavy. But 4 pounds is 4
  pounds. I was suggesting weight is a significant factor in the gestalt
  of how a bike rides and feels to the rider.

 I don't think so.  Does your bike feel different when ridden with full
 vs. no water bottles, or with full vs. empty water bottles?  I doubt you
 could make any guess at all about the state of your water supply from
 the way your bike feels.

 Frame stiffness, now that's a totally different story, and one that is
 largely independent of weight.  Different tires can make a bike feel
 very different, too -- and again, not because of any weight difference.

 I'm confident if someone loaded the water bottles on your Specialized
 with lead shot to bring it up to the weight of your other bike, it would
 still feel different and better to you.



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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread Scott Henry
Its not so much the weight as the location and type of weight.

Take a racing bike, replace the low spoke count wheels with some heavy duty
touring wheels.  Weight difference in the wheels can easily be felt.  Water
bottle do add pounds, but not in the manner that rotating weight does.

Outside of that, a carbon fiber or lightweight aluminun frame, moreso than
just being lighter, is designed to ride differently.  Compairing just
weights is not enough.  Take a lugged steel frame and re-create it with
carbon or aluminum or even titanium, matching the angles and measurements
and it will still ride differently.  You just can't compair one bike to a
different one, thats why we all have so many bikes in our garages and
basements.

The only real way to compair weights is to have a frame built up with
normal duty heavy Riv-ish parts and then build it again with lighter
racing parts.  Then you'd be able to notice a weight diffence.
Scott






On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 2:29 PM, Matthew J matthewj...@gmail.com wrote:

 I have two Abus Bordo locks.  One is the very heavy Granite, the other the
 new ultra-light.

 I got the ultra-light version for my Kellogg / Spectrum road bike.
 Typically the only time I stop when on that bike is to pick up a drink or
 what not, so lock security is not an issue.  I like the lighter Bordo for
 this bike as there is less chance of it will scratch the paint.

 A while back I was having work done on my city bike so I took the Kellogg
 to an appointment.  The Bordo Granite easily adds a pound over the
 ultra-light.  I cannot say I noticed any difference at all in the ride of
 the bike.

 Switching from the Grand Boid Cerfs to 700x32 Extra Legers - Wow - that
 makes a difference!

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
William's buddy Greg is not alone. Lots of magical thinking pervades all 
aspects of cycling even among some who have a seemingly solid background in 
physics. Credit marketing hype for overpowering reason. I believe that, at some 
point, lightweight becomes an issue of bragging rights rather than a 
performance improvement. Sure, a 16 lb bike designed for racing is probably 
faster than a 30 lb touring bike. But when the recreational rider spends a 
couple thousand dollars extra to turn his/her 16 lb racing bike into a 15 lb 
racing bike, he/she is just showing off. Not that there's anything wrong with 
that. Performance improvement is a nice little lie we tell ourselves so we 
don't feel so silly and pompous about buying a $300 saddle upgrade to save 38 
grams.

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread Mike Schiller
next thing you know someone is going to say skinnier tires are faster too!

~mike




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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread ted
It should be fairly easy for you to do that experiment if you are
interested. I would like to hear how it comes out if you do.
Also though 4 lbs is 4 lbs, the significance of those 4 lbs varies
with the situation. Adding 4 lbs to a car means nothing, adding 4 lbs
to a motorcycle would be hard (or impossible) to detect by feel,
adding 4 lbs to a 30 lb bike is going to be less noticeable than
adding 4 lbs to a 16 lb bike. And of course when you are trying to
close a gap jumping out of a corner, 4 lbs on your rims/tires is quite
different from 4 lbs on your frame.

On Jan 14, 11:10 am, eflayer eddie.fla...@att.net wrote:
 now that is an interesting proposal. i'd bet against you on that one though
 :)







 On Monday, January 14, 2013 6:24:34 AM UTC-8, Steve Palincsar wrote:

  On Sun, 2013-01-13 at 20:13 -0800, eflayer wrote:
   I was surprised the OP did not think that pounds of extra weight might
   not be responsible for the go fast feel of his go fast bike...even
   though by some standards both are relatively heavy. But 4 pounds is 4
   pounds. I was suggesting weight is a significant factor in the gestalt
   of how a bike rides and feels to the rider.

  I don't think so.  Does your bike feel different when ridden with full
  vs. no water bottles, or with full vs. empty water bottles?  I doubt you
  could make any guess at all about the state of your water supply from
  the way your bike feels.

  Frame stiffness, now that's a totally different story, and one that is
  largely independent of weight.  Different tires can make a bike feel
  very different, too -- and again, not because of any weight difference.

  I'm confident if someone loaded the water bottles on your Specialized
  with lead shot to bring it up to the weight of your other bike, it would
  still feel different and better to you.

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread Robert Zeidler
And lighter.

Sent from my iPad

On Jan 14, 2013, at 7:09 PM, Mike Schiller mikeybi...@rocketmail.com wrote:

 next thing you know someone is going to say skinnier tires are faster too!
 
 ~mike
 
 
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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread Robert Zeidler
There applies the law of diminishing returns. 

Sent from my iPad

On Jan 14, 2013, at 4:16 PM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery thill@gmail.com 
wrote:

 William's buddy Greg is not alone. Lots of magical thinking pervades all 
 aspects of cycling even among some who have a seemingly solid background in 
 physics. Credit marketing hype for overpowering reason. I believe that, at 
 some point, lightweight becomes an issue of bragging rights rather than a 
 performance improvement. Sure, a 16 lb bike designed for racing is probably 
 faster than a 30 lb touring bike. But when the recreational rider spends a 
 couple thousand dollars extra to turn his/her 16 lb racing bike into a 15 lb 
 racing bike, he/she is just showing off. Not that there's anything wrong with 
 that. Performance improvement is a nice little lie we tell ourselves so we 
 don't feel so silly and pompous about buying a $300 saddle upgrade to save 38 
 grams.
 
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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-14 Thread RJM
The difference in ride and speed when I swap from Soma tires to Pari Motos 
on my Sam Hillborne is noticeable, noticeable enough that I have a second 
wheelset for each tire; one for clubby rides and the other for Just Riding!
 
The difference is 120 grams per tire, I believe. The performance difference 
probably isn't totally weight, but I am sure it doesn't hurt.
 

On Sunday, January 13, 2013 2:38:01 PM UTC-6, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery 
wrote:

 I should have clarified that I don't place much importance on bike weight. 
 To a small extent I consider the weight of tires and rims, such that I 
 don't use 1000-gram tires if punctures don't seem to be a major concern, 
 nor do I use 400-gram rims on a bike I plan to thrash.

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Jan Heine
Weight is easily measured, but it's really not that important in itself. 

If I fill up three water bottles and add them to my bike, I've just added 
about 5 pounds, yet the bike feels the same most of the time. During normal 
riding, the extra 5 pounds are a non-issue. (I may feel the extra weight 
when I rise out of the saddle and throw the bike from side to side, or when 
I carry the bike into the basement, and it probably is measurable against 
the stopwatch on a long climb.) In summary, the overall bike weight is not 
very important.

That doesn't mean that a heavy bike feels and rides the same as a lighter 
one. Here is why: If, during the design process of my bike, I added just 
half a pound to the frame of my bike by going to thicker tubing walls, by 
using larger tubing diameters, or by adding extra tubes, then my bike would 
feel radically different. Through almost a decade of testing at *Bicycle 
Quarterly*, we've found that frame flex characteristics, more than anything 
else, determine the feel of a bike. We tested this in a double-blind test, 
with three bikes that were identical, except one had thicker tubing walls. 
(Even the weights were equalized.) Two of our three testers could tell the 
bikes apart with 100% accuracy, and both strongly preferred the thinwall 
frames. This was despite the difference between the frames being very small 
- one was flexible by today's standards, the others were super-flexible. (I 
suspect that the third tester might have been able to tell the difference 
if we had tested bikes that were more dissimilar, for example, a Surly 
Long-Haul Trucker tubeset against that of a Roadeo.)

So the weight of the frame often does impact the ride and performance, 
because it usually is inversely correlated with stiffness. We've also found 
that it's not the overall flex that matters as much as the balance of the 
frame. Traditional frames had evolved over decades of trial and error until 
they arrived at a formula that worked well: A relatively flexible top tube 
(usually 1/8 smaller in diameter than the down tube), a somewhat stiffer 
top tube, and very stiff (i.e., heavy and relatively short) chainstays. 
Most of today's best racing bikes are still built to that formula, and 
actually perform very well. Some of today's builders change that balance, 
for example, with oversize top tubes, but their bikes often don't perform 
as well as a result.

If you are interested in this topic, I suggest looking at our blog's 
Journey of Discovery series, where we have more details on this:

http://janheine.wordpress.com/category/a-journey-of-discovery/

and especially the entry on Frame Stiffness.

There are other factors that influence your bike's performance and feel, 
most notably the resistance of the tires, your riding position (more 
upright makes it harder to put out power), and aerodynamics (of the rider, 
not the bike).

Also, in the latest *Bicycle 
Quarterly*http://www.bikequarterly.com/current_issue.html, 
we tested two titanium race bikes with electronic shifting, and then 
compared their hillclimbing performance against a steel 650B randonneur 
bike with fenders, lights, and even a handlebar bag in a hillclimbing 
competition. The results were truly surprising and showed that factors 
other than weight are important in determining a bicycle's performance.

It is important to remember that performance isn't everything. Not every 
bike is optimized for performance, and not every rider seeks out 
performance. It all depends on how you ride and what your priorities are. 
And different people seem to have different pedal strokes and 
sensitivities. Some riders can make almost any bike go, while others really 
benefit from a bike that is fine-tuned to their pedal stroke.

Jan Heine
Editor
Bicycle Quarterly
www.bikequarterly.com

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread eflayer
You might try a 16.5 lb Specialized Roubaix and let us know what you think 
about that :). Mine weighs about 4 lbs less than my lightest steel bike. I 
still like steel a ton, but for pure fast club road rides, the Roubaix is 
more fun in most ways.
On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:

 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. To 
 abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36 
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The 
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front 
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 

 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast 
 bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive 
 geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes 
 off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, I 
 got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each bike 
 was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 

 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but 
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike 
 than I might have guessed. 


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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Jan Heine
As a reader pointed out, I should have said somewhat stiffer *down* tube 
instead of top tube below.

On Sunday, January 13, 2013 6:33:31 AM UTC-8, Jan Heine wrote:

  a formula that worked well: A relatively flexible top tube (usually 1/8 
 smaller in diameter than the down tube), a somewhat stiffer top tube, and 
 very stiff (i.e., heavy and relatively short) chainstays. 

 Jan Heine
 Editor
 Bicycle Quarterly
 www.bikequarterly.com


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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread ted
Some 15 or 20 years ago I changed from a semi-custom Nobilette frame
to a Gios Torino frame. The Gios was noticeably stiffer. When I did
jumps (on either flats or hills) the Gios responded with more
immediacy and directness than the Nobilette. With the Nobilette it
seemed I could feel the frame flexing or winding up, and on the Gios
the increase in effort seemed to go directly to rear wheels contact
patch. My performance in races and group rides with local racing clubs
was as good or better with the Gios.
In my experience a stiffer frame does not necessarily imply reduced
performance.
I suspect that differences in riders physiques and pedaling styles
affect what a bike fine-tuned to their pedaling stroke is.

On Jan 13, 6:56 am, Jan Heine hein...@earthlink.net wrote:
 As a reader pointed out, I should have said somewhat stiffer *down* tube
 instead of top tube below.







 On Sunday, January 13, 2013 6:33:31 AM UTC-8, Jan Heine wrote:

   a formula that worked well: A relatively flexible top tube (usually 1/8
  smaller in diameter than the down tube), a somewhat stiffer top tube, and
  very stiff (i.e., heavy and relatively short) chainstays.

  Jan Heine
  Editor
  Bicycle Quarterly
 www.bikequarterly.com

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Michael
I think it is difficult to measure the effect of weight on a bike's 
performance, when there are so many other factors that contribute to the 
ride, as Jan pointed out.
 

 My Bleriot (22.1 lbs) is only about 3 lbs. heavier than my Giant defy 3.
 I am not sure which bike is faster than the other.
 The Bleriot feels slower, but I have my fastest commute time on it.
  
 The Defy feels bouncy and twitchy but faster in take off and general 
 riding.
 The Bleriot feels stable and predictable and lower to the ground. I prefer 
 the Bleriot ride because I feel safer on it and there have been times like 
 yesterday when I am sure I would have crashed if I had been on the Defy 
 road bike, but the wide tires of the Bleriot helped me roll harmlessly over 
 road cracks along the narrow shoulder as a car passed.
  

 
 

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread ted
Is that 16.5 lbs your measurement? Does it include saddle, pedals, and
cages (race bikes are often weighed without those components)?
What is your lightest steel bike, and what wheels and components are
on it?
Also keep in mind that adding 4 lbs to your 16.5 lb roubaix is an
increase of nearly 25% whereas adding the same 4 lbs to a 31 lb bike
is only a 13% increase.

On Jan 13, 6:54 am, eflayer eddie.fla...@att.net wrote:
 You might try a 16.5 lb Specialized Roubaix and let us know what you think
 about that :). Mine weighs about 4 lbs less than my lightest steel bike. I
 still like steel a ton, but for pure fast club road rides, the Roubaix is
 more fun in most ways.







 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:

  I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. To
  abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36
  drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The
  Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front
  rack, front and rear Sackville bags.

  Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast
  bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive
  geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes
  off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, I
  got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each bike
  was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma.

  I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but
  clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but
  there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike
  than I might have guessed.

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Scot Brooks
In honor of Jan, I did my Ballard Trader Joe's grocery trip this morning with 
decreased tire pressures (about 65psi) and front loaded maybe 10 pounds of food 
in the basket. The Soma still climbed like mad rat. Budget grocery randonneur :)

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread PATRICK MOORE
It may not be weight, or it may be lower wheel weight, but I consistently
-- over 10 years -- find myself climbing faster, particularly when I stand,
on my 18 lb (pedals, cage, but no seat bag or bottle) gofast --
particularly noticeable because it is geared higher (75) than my other
bikes. In particular I often find myself *not* bailing on one particular
very steep 1/4 mile section, when I fully intend to, as I do on the other
fixies and which is a struggle on the 34-to-40 outer ring low on the Fargo
(38X32X29, 38X26X27.5 wheels respectively, even without a grocery load.

OTOH, the Herse I used to own, which was a tank, felt faster than either
the similarly weighted Sam Hill and the slightly heavier Fargo (with Kojak
wheelset) even when cruising in a 73 gear compared to a 67 to 69 gear --
this with decidedly non-optimum tires (IRC Tandem belted 30 mm -- these
felt better than the doggy 35 mm Pasela Tourguards). The Sam felt much like
the Fargo with Kojak wheelset: Not bad at all but certainly more sluggish
on the flats as on the hills.

I have no fixed idea why there should be such differences, but I guess
that, beside weight and wheel weight, and tire quality, there is fit: the
Herse fit as well or almost as well as my custom Rivs.

FWIW again, the much lighter-tubed and narrower-tubed '73 Motobecane felt
faster than the Sam or Fargo, but slower overall than the Herse or the
Rivs. 67 gear -- shod with said IRCs.

On Sun, Jan 13, 2013 at 11:45 AM, Scot Brooks scothinck...@gmail.comwrote:

 In honor of Jan, I did my Ballard Trader Joe's grocery trip this morning
 with decreased tire pressures (about 65psi) and front loaded maybe 10
 pounds of food in the basket. The Soma still climbed like mad rat. Budget
 grocery randonneur :)

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-- 

-
Patrick Moore, Albuquerque, NM, USA
For professional resumes, contact Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html
-

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread PATRICK MOORE
One more remark on sensations of fastness -- which can be correlated, at
least to some degree, with actual speed if you are accustomed to (1) riding
the same gears or very similar gears on different bikes and (2) are
sufficiently aware of your cadence: the tricycle (narrow-tubed 531, and
light for a trike at ~28 lb with Old School parts, felt noticeably draggier
than the Rivs, the Herse, and the Motobecane, and as well a bit slower than
the Sam and the Fargo/Kojaks, gearing taken into account. I attribute this
to the third wheel: the tires were, IIRC, IRC Tandem quality. Pushing the
(in this case) 71 cruising gear my cadence and the related effort/torque
was slower/higher, ceteris paribus.

Patrick ceteris paribus to you to, buddy Moore

On Sun, Jan 13, 2013 at 12:22 PM, PATRICK MOORE bertin...@gmail.com wrote:

 It may not be weight, or it may be lower wheel weight, but I consistently
 -- over 10 years -- find myself climbing faster, particularly when I stand,
 on my 18 lb (pedals, cage, but no seat bag or bottle) gofast --
 particularly noticeable because it is geared higher (75) than my other
 bikes. In particular I often find myself *not* bailing on one particular
 very steep 1/4 mile section, when I fully intend to, as I do on the other
 fixies and which is a struggle on the 34-to-40 outer ring low on the Fargo
 (38X32X29, 38X26X27.5 wheels respectively, even without a grocery load.

 OTOH, the Herse I used to own, which was a tank, felt faster than either
 the similarly weighted Sam Hill and the slightly heavier Fargo (with Kojak
 wheelset) even when cruising in a 73 gear compared to a 67 to 69 gear --
 this with decidedly non-optimum tires (IRC Tandem belted 30 mm -- these
 felt better than the doggy 35 mm Pasela Tourguards). The Sam felt much like
 the Fargo with Kojak wheelset: Not bad at all but certainly more sluggish
 on the flats as on the hills.

 I have no fixed idea why there should be such differences, but I guess
 that, beside weight and wheel weight, and tire quality, there is fit: the
 Herse fit as well or almost as well as my custom Rivs.

 FWIW again, the much lighter-tubed and narrower-tubed '73 Motobecane felt
 faster than the Sam or Fargo, but slower overall than the Herse or the
 Rivs. 67 gear -- shod with said IRCs.


 On Sun, Jan 13, 2013 at 11:45 AM, Scot Brooks scothinck...@gmail.comwrote:

 In honor of Jan, I did my Ballard Trader Joe's grocery trip this morning
 with decreased tire pressures (about 65psi) and front loaded maybe 10
 pounds of food in the basket. The Soma still climbed like mad rat. Budget
 grocery randonneur :)

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 For professional resumes, contact Patrick Moore, ACRW
 http://resumespecialties.com/index.html
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For professional resumes, contact Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html
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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Garth
Keep it simple. 

The tires.   Unless you compare with the same tire on very similar wheels, 
the comparison is moot. 

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
There is very little useful information contained in that oft-discussed 
quantity known as bike weight. If you shave 100 grams off your handlebar, the 
effect is different than shaving 100 grams off your tires. Even specifying 
frame weight tells only a small part of the story, since you can reduce frame 
weight in a variety of ways.

Personally, I don't think about weight. I select components that have the 
appropriate mix of function, looks, weight, durability, street cred, and 
affordability, and let the bike weight be the dependent variable. Then I add 30 
pounds of miscellaneous crap in various bags and accessories. Then I ride and 
don't think about weight, or even speed.

For me, as an unracer and unrandonneur, weight and speed are irrelevant, except 
that I need to have a rough idea how many minutes I should expect for my 
commute, so I'm not late.

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
I should have clarified that I don't place much importance on bike weight. To a 
small extent I consider the weight of tires and rims, such that I don't use 
1000-gram tires if punctures don't seem to be a major concern, nor do I use 
400-gram rims on a bike I plan to thrash.

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread eflayer
my Roubaix weighs 16.5 with all the normal road riding parts; pedals saddle 
cages, etc. what's your point? light is fast and fun. some like/need a 30 
lb bike, some prefer lighter. why truck when you can fly?
On Sunday, January 13, 2013 9:37:23 AM UTC-8, ted wrote:

 Is that 16.5 lbs your measurement? Does it include saddle, pedals, and 
 cages (race bikes are often weighed without those components)? 
 What is your lightest steel bike, and what wheels and components are 
 on it? 
 Also keep in mind that adding 4 lbs to your 16.5 lb roubaix is an 
 increase of nearly 25% whereas adding the same 4 lbs to a 31 lb bike 
 is only a 13% increase. 

 On Jan 13, 6:54 am, eflayer eddie.fla...@att.net wrote: 
  You might try a 16.5 lb Specialized Roubaix and let us know what you 
 think 
  about that :). Mine weighs about 4 lbs less than my lightest steel bike. 
 I 
  still like steel a ton, but for pure fast club road rides, the Roubaix 
 is 
  more fun in most ways. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote: 
  
   I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. 
 To 
   abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 
 12-36 
   drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The 
   Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, 
 front 
   rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 
  
   Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight 
 go-fast 
   bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more 
 aggressive 
   geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just 
 takes 
   off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, 
 I 
   got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each 
 bike 
   was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 
  
   I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but 
   clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but 
   there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each 
 bike 
   than I might have guessed. 


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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Robert Zeidler
Agreed. I normally ride anywhere from 66-69cm bikes. I love my Rivs for the 
ride quality. But if I'm doing a metric or a double-metric century w/thousands 
of feet in climbing on New England hills where there's a lot of 8-12% grades 
all the time, I'm taking my Roubaix (64cm, 18.2lbs), or a Seven (67cm, 19 lbs), 
or a Calfee (69cm, 19.8lbs w/disc brakes). If for no other reason that I can 
ride at a fast clip, but still enjoy the company of others, occasionally pass 
some people, and never quite run out of gas. This mostly comes into play on any 
long climb, where, even though I'm old, tall, heavy-ish, and relatively slow, I 
can get by w/ Cytomax as fuel and keep the cool kids in sight. 

IMHO, lighter is always righter. 

RGZ

Sent from my iPad

On Jan 13, 2013, at 9:54 AM, eflayer eddie.fla...@att.net wrote:

 You might try a 16.5 lb Specialized Roubaix and let us know what you think 
 about that :). Mine weighs about 4 lbs less than my lightest steel bike. I 
 still like steel a ton, but for pure fast club road rides, the Roubaix is 
 more fun in most ways.
 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:
 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. To 
 abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36 
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The Soma's 
 got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front rack, front 
 and rear Sackville bags. 
 
 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast bike 
 with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive geometry 
 (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes off like 
 crazy and feels incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, I got one of 
 those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each bike was 35lbs 
 for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 
 
 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but 
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but there 
 must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike than I 
 might have guessed. 
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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread PATRICK MOORE
You go, guy! I wholeheartedly agree with the general proposition that,
ceteris paribus, lighter is righter. Of course there are many cetera to
considera!

Patrick 18, ~25 (with empty Sackville Med and #4 HpX and lights), ~29/33
lb, all ready to ride Moore

On Sun, Jan 13, 2013 at 5:03 PM, Robert Zeidler zeidler.rob...@gmail.comwrote:


 IMHO, lighter is always righter.


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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
A few years ago, I had an 80s univega that was similar in many ways to a 
Rambouillet. No racks or fenders, skinny 700x25 tires, roadie gearing, about 
21-22 lbs. It was the lightest, raciest bike I ever had, and very comfortable 
for me. I rode it 200 miles that year, with 150 of those miles coming in a 
single ride. I rode it so few times because, like previous similar attempts, I 
found that riding a road bike was too confining. I relish the freedom to roll 
off the pavement more than I care about riding my fastest or keeping up with 
faster riders. To each his/her own, but now my speed bike is a Surly 
Cross-check with 700x40 marathon supremes. That said, I do sometimes get a wild 
hair and casually pass roadies on expensive bikes. This is especially fun on 
my Brompton or Pugsley.

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread C.J. Filip
Four bikes in my stable.  The heaviest ones get ridden the most.
Heaviest being ~30lbs on my Saluki (and preferred ride) with rack and
bags.  My lightest, a steel Specialized Allez circa 2003 weighing in
at ~19lbs, is a joy to ride, but I physically can't ride it without
being kitted up and ride in semi-sterile and relatively rare
conditions of paved roads in these parts.   Boiler plate Riv-inspired
response, but true.

On Jan 13, 5:02 pm, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery thill@gmail.com
wrote:
 A few years ago, I had an 80s univega that was similar in many ways to a 
 Rambouillet. No racks or fenders, skinny 700x25 tires, roadie gearing, about 
 21-22 lbs. It was the lightest, raciest bike I ever had, and very comfortable 
 for me. I rode it 200 miles that year, with 150 of those miles coming in a 
 single ride. I rode it so few times because, like previous similar attempts, 
 I found that riding a road bike was too confining. I relish the freedom to 
 roll off the pavement more than I care about riding my fastest or keeping up 
 with faster riders. To each his/her own, but now my speed bike is a Surly 
 Cross-check with 700x40 marathon supremes. That said, I do sometimes get a 
 wild hair and casually pass roadies on expensive bikes. This is especially 
 fun on my Brompton or Pugsley.

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread charlie
I love riding my Hillborne and don't even know what it weighs. I know I 
weigh 257 so it makes little difference to me if my bike weighs 2-5 pounds 
less than another one. I own an 80's go fast standard dimension Columbus SL 
tubed bicycle and it is no faster or more comfortable for me to ride. I put 
quite a few miles on three other frames similarly constructed with old 
school skinny tubing of varying thicknesses and my best ride so far has 
been my Surly Trucker with oversized tubing and my new (two top tubed) 
Hillborne. Maybe at my weight, I need them. A pure performance bike 
probably should have a more flexible frame and tuned to rider weight but I 
want a frame to last and will gladly give up a slight edge in performance 
for that feature.

On Saturday, January  12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote: 

 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. To 
 abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36 
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The 
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front 
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 

 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast 
 bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive 
 geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes 
 off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, I 
 got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each bike 
 was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 

 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but 
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike 
 than I might have guessed. 


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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread dougP
As long as I can carry my Atlantis up stairs  load onto the hooks on the 
train, it's not too heavy.  My guess is at least 35 lbs.  But the scale is 
upstairs and the bike is in the cold garage; maybe later.

dougP

On Sunday, January 13, 2013 12:38:01 PM UTC-8, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery 
wrote:

 I should have clarified that I don't place much importance on bike weight. 
 To a small extent I consider the weight of tires and rims, such that I 
 don't use 1000-gram tires if punctures don't seem to be a major concern, 
 nor do I use 400-gram rims on a bike I plan to thrash.

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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread eflayer
I was surprised the OP did not think that pounds of extra weight might not 
be responsible for the go fast feel of his go fast bike...even though by 
some standards both are relatively heavy. But 4 pounds is 4 pounds. I was 
suggesting weight is a significant factor in the gestalt of how a bike 
rides and feels to the rider. My custom steel with carbon fork weighs about 
21 pounds. My Roubaix weighs about 16.5. I like them both a lot, but for 
pure paved road riding, given a choice, I most often seem to choose the 
Roubaix.
On Sunday, January 13, 2013 7:13:37 PM UTC-8, ted wrote:

 Cool, thanks for the added detail. 
 As to my point, Im not sure I have one, though Im not sure what yours 
 was either. The original poster seemed to opine that the 4 lb 
 difference between a 31lb bike and a 35 lb bike didn't matter much. 
 You suggested he try a bike that weighs about half as much, or about 
 16lbs less, or about 4 times as big a weight difference than he was 
 talking about. 
 By all means ride what you like. 

 On Jan 13, 3:40 pm, eflayer eddie.fla...@att.net wrote: 
  my Roubaix weighs 16.5 with all the normal road riding parts; pedals 
 saddle 
  cages, etc. what's your point? light is fast and fun. some like/need a 
 30 
  lb bike, some prefer lighter. why truck when you can fly? 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  On Sunday, January 13, 2013 9:37:23 AM UTC-8, ted wrote: 
  
   Is that 16.5 lbs your measurement? Does it include saddle, pedals, and 
   cages (race bikes are often weighed without those components)? 
   What is your lightest steel bike, and what wheels and components are 
   on it? 
   Also keep in mind that adding 4 lbs to your 16.5 lb roubaix is an 
   increase of nearly 25% whereas adding the same 4 lbs to a 31 lb bike 
   is only a 13% increase. 
  
   On Jan 13, 6:54 am, eflayer eddie.fla...@att.net wrote: 
You might try a 16.5 lb Specialized Roubaix and let us know what you 
   think 
about that :). Mine weighs about 4 lbs less than my lightest steel 
 bike. 
   I 
still like steel a ton, but for pure fast club road rides, the 
 Roubaix 
   is 
more fun in most ways. 
  
On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote: 
  
 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double 
 Cross. 
   To 
 abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 
   12-36 
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. 
 The 
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, 
   front 
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 
  
 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight 
   go-fast 
 bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more 
   aggressive 
 geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it 
 just 
   takes 
 off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. 
 Lo-and-behold, 
   I 
 got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of 
 each 
   bike 
 was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 
  
 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, 
 but 
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, 
 but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of 
 each 
   bike 
 than I might have guessed. 


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[RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Scot Brooks
Eflayer, 
I was just saying that I was surprised they felt so different but were both, in 
fact, bikes that might shop in the husky section of the store. I like hearing 
about the interesting nuances of bicycle feel, especially in this case where I 
have two bikes that I love equally and like to fawn over with analytical 
discussion. 

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Peter Morgano
The idea of me weighing a bike is like weighing myself, pointless other
than to illustrate what I already know. I sure do like to ride the bikes I
have though. I guess if it ever gets to where I am using a scale to weigh
my food I can worry about a few pounds here or there on a bike. Not that
there isnt a whole set of people for which this does make sense, and more
power to them. This argument is somewhat helmet-like where the two sides
probably will never see eye to eye and someone will get all un-civil
like and ruin it.

On Sun, Jan 13, 2013 at 11:13 PM, eflayer eddie.fla...@att.net wrote:

 I was surprised the OP did not think that pounds of extra weight might not
 be responsible for the go fast feel of his go fast bike...even though by
 some standards both are relatively heavy. But 4 pounds is 4 pounds. I was
 suggesting weight is a significant factor in the gestalt of how a bike
 rides and feels to the rider. My custom steel with carbon fork weighs about
 21 pounds. My Roubaix weighs about 16.5. I like them both a lot, but for
 pure paved road riding, given a choice, I most often seem to choose the
 Roubaix.

 On Sunday, January 13, 2013 7:13:37 PM UTC-8, ted wrote:

 Cool, thanks for the added detail.
 As to my point, Im not sure I have one, though Im not sure what yours
 was either. The original poster seemed to opine that the 4 lb
 difference between a 31lb bike and a 35 lb bike didn't matter much.
 You suggested he try a bike that weighs about half as much, or about
 16lbs less, or about 4 times as big a weight difference than he was
 talking about.
 By all means ride what you like.

 On Jan 13, 3:40 pm, eflayer eddie.fla...@att.net wrote:
  my Roubaix weighs 16.5 with all the normal road riding parts; pedals
 saddle
  cages, etc. what's your point? light is fast and fun. some like/need a
 30
  lb bike, some prefer lighter. why truck when you can fly?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  On Sunday, January 13, 2013 9:37:23 AM UTC-8, ted wrote:
 
   Is that 16.5 lbs your measurement? Does it include saddle, pedals,
 and
   cages (race bikes are often weighed without those components)?
   What is your lightest steel bike, and what wheels and components are
   on it?
   Also keep in mind that adding 4 lbs to your 16.5 lb roubaix is an
   increase of nearly 25% whereas adding the same 4 lbs to a 31 lb bike
   is only a 13% increase.
 
   On Jan 13, 6:54 am, eflayer eddie.fla...@att.net wrote:
You might try a 16.5 lb Specialized Roubaix and let us know what
 you
   think
about that :). Mine weighs about 4 lbs less than my lightest steel
 bike.
   I
still like steel a ton, but for pure fast club road rides, the
 Roubaix
   is
more fun in most ways.
 
On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:
 
 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double
 Cross.
   To
 abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24
   12-36
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front
 rack/basket/Shopsack. The
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon
 Racers,
   front
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags.
 
 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight
   go-fast
 bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more
   aggressive
 geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it
 just
   takes
 off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble.
 Lo-and-behold,
   I
 got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of
 each
   bike
 was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma.
 
 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in
 feel, but
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to
 ride, but
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of
 each
   bike
 than I might have guessed.

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Re: [RBW] Re: Weight's a weird thing

2013-01-13 Thread Benz, Sunnyvale, CA
Although I do not dispute that weight plays a part in how a bike *feels*, 
unless your Rivs weigh close to 30 lb or you weigh closer to 100 than 200 
lb, those few pounds is only a very small percentage of the total 
bike+rider+accessories weight, which is what's important in a purely 
physics-based examination of performance factors. My experience is aligned 
with Jan's - I don't believe bike weight plays a primary factor in 
performance, at least at my level. Fit (aggressive vs. relaxed) and its 
associated rider position plays a much larger role in overall performance. 
As an example, my Della Santa and Independent Fab differ by probably 5 or 
more pounds (partially due to component mix), but both allow me to mix it 
with the boys. And yes, long 8-12% roads are (unfortunately) common around 
these parts.

Stating this does not exclude me from being a weight-weenie though, as my 
chest of Ti hardware will attest to. :)


On Sunday, January 13, 2013 4:03:26 PM UTC-8, z-man wrote:

 Agreed. I normally ride anywhere from 66-69cm bikes. I love my Rivs for 
 the ride quality. But if I'm doing a metric or a double-metric century 
 w/thousands of feet in climbing on New England hills where there's a lot of 
 8-12% grades all the time, I'm taking my Roubaix (64cm, 18.2lbs), or a 
 Seven (67cm, 19 lbs), or a Calfee (69cm, 19.8lbs w/disc brakes). If for no 
 other reason that I can ride at a fast clip, but still enjoy the company of 
 others, occasionally pass some people, and never quite run out of gas. This 
 mostly comes into play on any long climb, where, even though I'm old, tall, 
 heavy-ish, and relatively slow, I can get by w/ Cytomax as fuel and keep 
 the cool kids in sight. 

 IMHO, lighter is always righter. 

 RGZ

 Sent from my iPad

 On Jan 13, 2013, at 9:54 AM, eflayer eddie@att.net javascript: 
 wrote:

 You might try a 16.5 lb Specialized Roubaix and let us know what you think 
 about that :). Mine weighs about 4 lbs less than my lightest steel bike. I 
 still like steel a ton, but for pure fast club road rides, the Roubaix is 
 more fun in most ways.
 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 9:33:04 PM UTC-8, Scot Brooks wrote:

 I spend about equal time on my Sam Hillborne and my Soma Double Cross. To 
 abbreviate the way they're normally set up, the Sam's got a 40/24 12-36 
 drivetrain, 35c Soma New Xpress tires, front rack/basket/Shopsack. The 
 Soma's got a 48/34 11-34 drivetrain, 35c Schwalbe Marathon Racers, front 
 rack, front and rear Sackville bags. 

 Anyway, I always assumed that my Soma was kind of a lightweight go-fast 
 bike with it's fancy Tange Prestige tubing and slightly more aggressive 
 geometry (shorter chain stays anyway). Compared to the Sam, it just takes 
 off like crazy and *feels *incredibly quick and nimble. Lo-and-behold, I 
 got one of those hook scale things today, and the total weight of each bike 
 was 35lbs for the Sam and 31lbs for the Soma. 

 I thought it was the weight that explained the difference in feel, but 
 clearly that's not the case. Both are equally pleasurable to ride, but 
 there must be far more factors involved in the overall feel of each bike 
 than I might have guessed. 

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